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Deploying Patchwork
Patchwork uses the django framework - there is some background on deploying
django applications here:
http://www.djangobook.com/en/2.0/chapter12/
You'll need the following (applications used for patchwork development are
in brackets):
* A python interpreter
* django >= 1.2
* A webserver (apache)
* mod_python or flup
* A database server (postgresql, mysql)
* relevant python modules for the database server (e.g: python-mysqldb)
1. Database setup
At present, I've tested with PostgreSQL and (to a lesser extent) MySQL
database servers. If you have any (positive or negative) experiences with
either, email me.
For the following commands, a $ prefix signifies that the command should be
entered at your shell prompt, and a > prefix signifies the commant-line
client for your sql server (psql or mysql)
Create a database for the system, add accounts for two system users: the
web user (the user that your web server runs as) and the mail user (the
user that your mail server runs as). On Ubuntu these are
www-data and nobody, respectively.
As an alternative, you can use password-based login and a single database
account. This is described further down.
For PostgreSQL (ident-based)
$ createdb patchwork
$ createuser www-data
$ createuser nobody
- postgres uses the standard UNIX authentication, so these users
will only be accessible for processes running as the same username.
This means that no passwords need to be set.
For PostgreSQL (password-based)
$ createuser -PE patchwork
$ createdb -O patchwork patchwork
Once that is done, you need to tell Django about the new Database
settings, using local_settings.py (see below) to override the defaults
in settings.py:
DATABASE_ENGINE = 'postgresql_psycopg2'
DATABASE_NAME = 'patchwork'
DATABASE_USER = 'patchwork'
DATABASE_PASSWORD = 'my_secret_password
DATABASE_HOST = 'localhost'
DATABASE_PORT = ''
For MySQL:
$ mysql
> CREATE DATABASE 'patchwork';
> CREATE USER 'www-data'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '<password>';
> CREATE USER 'nobody'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY '<password>';
Once that is done, you need to tell Django about the new Database
settings, using local_settings.py (see below) to override the defaults
in settings.py:
DATABASE_ENGINE = 'mysql'
DATABASE_NAME = 'patchwork'
DATABASE_USER = 'root'
DATABASE_PASSWORD = 'my_secret_root_password'
DATABSE_HOST = 'localhost'
DATABASE_PORT = ''
2. Django setup
Set up some initial directories in the patchwork base directory:
mkdir -p lib/packages lib/python
lib/packages is for stuff we'll download, lib/python is to add
to our python path. We'll symlink python modules into lib/python.
At the time of release, patchwork depends on django version 1.2 or
later. Your distro probably provides this. If not, do a:
cd lib/packages
svn checkout http://code.djangoproject.com/svn/django/tags/releases/1.2
cd ../python
ln -s ../packages/django/django ./django
The settings.py file contains default settings for patchwork, you'll
need to configure settings for your own setup.
Rather than edit settings.py, create a file 'local_settings.py', and
override or add settings as necessary. You'll need to define the
following:
SECRET_KEY
ADMINS
TIME_ZONE
LANGUAGE_CODE
DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL
NOTIFICATION_FROM_EMAIL
You can generate the SECRET_KEY with the following python code:
import string, random
chars = string.letters + string.digits + string.punctuation
print repr("".join([random.choice(chars) for i in range(0,50)]))
If you have patchwork installed in somewhere other than /srv/patchwork,
you'll also need to define:
MEDIA_ROOT
TEMPLATE_DIRS
If you wish to enable the XML-RPC interface, add the following to
your local_settings.py file:
ENABLE_XMLRPC = True
Then, get patchwork to create its tables in your configured database:
cd apps/
PYTHONPATH=../lib/python ./manage.py syncdb
And add privileges for your mail and web users. This is only needed if
you use the ident-based approach. If you use password-based database
authentication, you can skip this step.
Postgresql:
psql -f lib/sql/grant-all.postgres.sql patchwork
MySQL:
mysql patchwork < lib/sql/grant-all.mysql.sql
3. Apache setup
Example apache configuration files are in lib/apache2/.
wsgi:
django has built-in support for WSGI, which supersedes the fastcgi
handler. It is thus the preferred method to run patchwork.
The necessary configuration for Apache2 may be found in
lib/apache2/patchwork.wsgi.conf.
You will need to install/enable mod_wsgi for this to work:
a2enmod wsgi
apache2ctl restart
mod_python:
An example apache configuration file for mod_python is in:
lib/apache2/patchwork.mod_python.conf
However, mod_python and mod_php may not work well together. So, if your
web server is used for serving php files, the fastcgi method may suit
instead.
fastcgi:
django has built-in support for fastcgi, which requires the
'flup' python module. An example configuration is in:
lib/apache2/patchwork.fastcgi.conf
- this also requires the mod_rewrite apache module to be loaded.
Once you have apache set up, you can start the fastcgi server with:
cd /srv/patchwork/apps
./manage.py runfcgi method=prefork \
socket=/srv/patchwork/var/fcgi.sock \
pidfile=/srv/patchwork/var/fcgi.pid
4. Configure patchwork
Now, you should be able to administer patchwork, by visiting the
URL:
http://your-host/admin/
You'll probably want to do the following:
* Set up your projects
* Configure your website address (in the Sites) section of the admin
5. Subscribe a local address to the mailing list
You will need an email address for patchwork to receive email on - for
example - patchwork@, and this address will need to be subscribed to the
list. Depending on the mailing list, you will probably need to confirm the
subscription - temporarily direct the alias to yourself to do this.
6. Setup your MTA to deliver mail to the parsemail script
Your MTA will need to deliver mail to the parsemail script in the email/
directory. (Note, do not use the parsemail.py script directly). Something
like this in /etc/aliases is suitable for postfix:
patchwork: "|/srv/patchwork/apps/patchwork/bin/parsemail.sh"
You may need to customise the parsemail.sh script if you haven't installed
patchwork in /srv/patchwork.
Test that you can deliver a patch to this script:
sudo -u nobody /srv/patchwork/apps/patchwork/bin/parsemail.sh < mail
Some errors:
* __init__() got an unexpected keyword argument 'max_length'
- you're running an old version of django. If your distribution doesn't
provide a newer version, just download and extract django into
lib/python/django
* ERROR: permission denied for relation patchwork_...
- the user that patchwork is running as (ie, the user of the web-server)
doesn't have access to the patchwork tables in the database. Check that
your web-server user exists in the database, and that it has permissions
to the tables.
* pwclient fails for actions that require authentication, but a username
and password is given int ~/.pwclient rc. Server reports "No authentication
credentials given".
- if you're using the FastCGI interface to apache, you'll need the
'-pass-header Authorization' option to the FastCGIExternalServer
configuration directive.
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